While patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) in most wealthy settings have access to more than
20 disease-modifying therapies (DMTs), patients in resource-limited settings often have access
to none. This disparity in MS treatment access is extreme compared to the many
diseases—neurological and otherwise—for which effective, scientifically proven treatments
exist.Many countries worldwide procure drugs according to the World Health Organization’s
Model List of Essential Medicines.
Since there are no MS DMTs listed, immunosuppressive agents, including rituximab and
its quality-assured biosimilars, listed for other indications, should be considered for the
treatment of MS. Among low-income countries that procure a limited supply of “on-label” MS
DMTs, the most common are interferon beta and glatiramer acetate.
Patients with MS with only these two options may alternate between low-efficacy agents
each time they have a disease attack. This unfortunate situation requires renewed thinking on
how best to treat people with MS in resource-limited settings.There are practical advantages to rituximab use for MS in resource-limited settings,
including its appropriate use in multiple mimicking central nervous system (CNS) demyelinating
disorders such as neuromyelitis optica. Semi-annual dosing of a DMT is pragmatic for highly
mobile resource-limited populations, such as refugees.
While these pragmatic factors justify B-cell therapies as a treatment approach in
general, they do not justify low-dosing. By contrast, barriers to intravenous rituximab
treatment are few infusion centers, usually concentrated in large cities; scarcity of skilled
personnel to treat MS; and the increased need for laboratory screening and monitoring compared
to other DMTs.People in resource-limited settings with MS—like all people with MS—deserve highly effective,
safe, tolerable, and affordable treatments that have a robust evidence base. The question of
whether low-dose rituximab is as efficacious, safer, and more affordable
should be examined for people with MS.Knowledge on the efficacy of low-dose rituximab is inadequate for people with MS to recommend
it routinely as a standard of care. Importantly, no standard definition of low-dose exists,
and no consensus dosing strategy of rituximab in neuroinflammatory disease has yet transpired.
Initial definitions of low dose range from 100 mg to 1000 mg per dose or
cycle.[5-8] An observational cohort from Sweden found that patients treated with a
median dose of 500 mg intravenous (IV) every 6 months was highly effective in some people with MS.
However, there are few long-term follow-up studies of low-dose rituximab including
disability outcomes.In all settings, rational dosing of rituximab is needed, including a focus on the therapeutic
goal, which is the degree of B-cell depletion, not the overall dose.
It is uncertain whether dosing studies of rituximab in MS in high-income settings
extrapolate well to patients in resource-limited settings—who may be on average
younger, of lower body mass index, and have different disease risk factors. While real-world
data from low-income settings is emerging and low-dose rituximab appears promising, the
picture remains incomplete. When a tiered dosing strategy of rituximab was tested in 118
people with MS in India, the authors found dosing of 500 mg IV rituximab every 9–12 months in
34 patients appeared effective.
Low-dosing was administered to patients with less disease activity via pre-treatment
disease assessment of patients with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and follow-up evaluation
clinically alongside serial flow cytometry for serum B-cell subsets. By contrast, a pre-print study
of 85 Iranian people with MS treated with rituximab (500 mg 2 weeks apart every
6 months) reported 18 patients experienced a relapse over a 4-year observation period.
Notably, the initiation of rituximab in these patients was based on a poor clinical response
to a first-line DMT. Financial constraints precluded the use of flow cytometry in all
patients.There remains equipoise on which patients would benefit from low-dose rituximab versus
higher-dosed rituximab. Prospective, randomized studies comparing doses are required in
resource-limited settings, including in children. While many people with MS would likely
benefit more from low-dose rituximab compared to interferons or glatiramer acetate, these same
patients would likely benefit even more from higher-dosed B-cell therapies. Selection of the
subset of MS patients who could be effectively treated with the lowest doses may require
additional expenditures in laboratory tests, neuroimaging, and personnel, expenditures that
could obviate the costs of lower dosing.Beyond efficacy, there are two main arguments for the preferential use of low-dose to
high-dose rituximab in resource-limited settings: (1) lower risk of serious infections and
hypogammaglobulinemia and (2) lower cost.The risks of infection during immunosuppression could be higher in resource-limited settings
for a variety of reasons, including the wide range of pathogens found in tropical zones and
the impact of poverty on infectious diseases. However, limited data substantiate the
hypothesis that low-dose rituximab leads to lower rates of serious infection in people with MS
compared to typically used higher doses.
Serious infections have not been disproportionately reported in MS patients treated
with rituximab in resource-limited settings.[6-9]The second main argument to lower dose is cost. Assuming an average cost of 23USD per 10 mL
vial of rituximab (10 mg/mL) in resource-limited settings,
a dose of 1000 mg would cost ~2,300USD per cycle or 4,600USD annually if dosed every
6 months. Since many patients in resource-limited settings pay for medicines out of pocket,
only ultra-low-dose rituximab (<500 mg every 6 months) could be affordable without
additional financial support. The World Bank estimates 40 countries have a gross national
income (GNI) per capita of <1500USD per year. Notably, these costs do not include
laboratory screening, administration by skilled health care workers, additional medicines to
improve tolerability, or patients’ transportation costs. Moreover, since MS affects
disproportionately young women, a demographic group already disadvantaged in several
resource-limited settings in terms of education, employment opportunity, personal income, and
social safety nets, cost almost certainly remains a major determinative factor in treatment
choice for most people living with MS in the poorest settings.When cost of an effective drug is the most critical factor in making a dosing determination
for a disabling and life-threatening disease, more must be done by the global community than
recommend a lower dose. One must question whether lower doses of any effective drug can be
ethically recommended based on cost alone in MS. In other diseases, including HIV/AIDS,
insulin-dependent diabetes, and chronic myeloid leukemia, re-negotiation of drug pricing and
ensuring adequate supply chains of life-sustaining treatments have occurred. Although not
straightforward, political will, advocacy, and science have come together to improve cost.
People with MS in resource-limited settings should not be subject to no treatment,
less-adequate treatment, less robust data for their DMT use, or fewer treatment options due to
issues of cost alone. The MS field can achieve rational drug pricing and evidence-based drug
dosing for patients in resource-limited settings.
Authors: A Scott Nielsen; Augusto Miravalle; Annette Langer-Gould; Joanna Cooper; Keith R Edwards; R Philip Kinkel Journal: Mult Scler Date: 2011-08-09 Impact factor: 6.312
Authors: Daniel H Whittam; Emma C Tallantyre; Stephen Jolles; Saif Huda; Robert J Moots; Ho Jin Kim; Neil P Robertson; Bruce A C Cree; Anu Jacob Journal: Pract Neurol Date: 2018-11-29